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Mosby’s Raid on Herndon Station
On March 17, 1863, Captain John Singleton Mosby “The Gray Ghost” raided a union outpost at Herndon Station in Northern Virginia. The raid was a part of a series of such raids coordinated by confederate Captain Mosby and his raiders in 1863 in areas of Northern Virginia. The raid on Herndon Station was the furthest north into Union lines Mosby and his men ventured. During the raid of Herndon Station 25 Union picket men were captured, and four Union men having lunch at the home of Herndon resident Kitty “Kitchen” Hanna were also found and captured by Mosby’s raiders. The Town of Herndon still remembers the raid to this day as an important part of the town’s history and participation in the Civil War.

The Days Leading up to the Raid
The raid on Herndon Station was a part of a series of raids under the command of Confederate Captain John Singleton Mosby and The 43rd Virginia Cavalry Battalion. Mosby and his men were not a traditional army unit, in that the unit was able to assemble to carry out a raid and quickly disperse afterwards. This ability gave Mosby the nickname “The Gray Ghost”, his men of the 43rd Virginia Cavalry Battalion were given the nickname “Mosby’s Raiders”. On March 15, 1863, two days before the raid of Herndon Station, Mosby was promoted to the position of Captain. This promotion was given shortly after Mosby’s raid of the Fairfax Courthouse, only a few miles south of Herndon Station, on March 5, 1863. After his promotion Mosby and his raiders then made their way to Herndon Station on March 17, 1863.

The Raid on Herndon Station
On March 171863, Captain Mosby raided a union outpost located at Herndon Station in Herndon, Virginia. Lt. Alexander G. Watson was commanding a picket of 25 union men who had been on duty outside of the local sawmill for the past 48 hours. Mosby and his men approached the picket and the picketers falsely believed Mosby’s crew to be a relief party. Before the picket realized what was happening, Mosby’s crew charged the sawmill and quickly captured many of the picket men and caused the rest to surrender with threats to burn the sawmill down. Amidst the chaos local resident Kitty “Kitchen” Hanna was preparing lunch at her husband Nathaniel “Nat” Hanna’s request for four union officers: Captain Robert Schofield, Major William Wells, Lieutenant Watson, and Lieutenant Perley C. J. Cheney. Mosby’s men noticed the four men’s horses outside of the Hanna house and went to investigate. Seeing Mosby’s men approaching Schofield and Wells ran out of the Hanna house and were quickly captured by the raiders. The other two officers, Watson and Cheney, ran up to the attic of the house to hide. Mosby’s men came into the house and shot at the ceiling, calling the officers to surrender. The shots caused Major Wells to fall through the ceiling into his captor’s arms. After the war Major Wells and Lieutenant Schofield returned to the Hanna house to retrieve their guns, which they had hidden in the walls that day.

Kitty “Kitchen” Hanna
            Kitty “Kitchen” Hanna was born on April 22, 1830, and died on June 18, 1907. Kitty was a loyal southerner, and married to local merchant and Union man Nathaniel “Nat” Hanna. On the day of Mosby’s raid, Kitty had been serving lunch to four union officers at the request of her husband Nat. Kitty’s retelling of the   events that transpired the day of the raid were recorded. Kitty stated that on the day of the raid she was simply serving pie to her guests when Mosby’s men ambushed them. Kitty was terrified at the scene and begged the men to leave the house, so that the raiders would not come in. The events that transpired shocked Kitty. She later stated that captain Mosby mentioned her in his memoir as a Union woman, which greatly angered her because she was a loyal southerner. According to Kitty, Captain Mosby returned to the Hanna house weeks after the raid to apologize for shooting in her house and asked her if he could read her newspaper, a request which she denied.

Historic Locations of the Raid
The Hanna House- At the time of the raid, Nathaniel and Kitty Hanna were living in a small cottage located on the site which is now the location of the Main Street bank on 727 Locust Street. Prior to their small cottage home, the Hanna’s lived in a small white house located at 618 Monroe Street in downtown Herndon. The house is still standing and is now the home of a hair salon. The older residents of the town still refer to the home as the Hanna House.

Herndon Station- The Herndon Station is still standing at the same location, 717 Lynn Street, as the day the raid took place in 1863. It is a monument to the town, though it no longer functions as a train station. The station is now a museum owned by the Herndon Historical Society. The museum houses railroad memorabilia, artifacts from town residents, artifacts from WW2, artifacts from the USS Herndon, and history of the US navy commander William Lewis Herndon from whom the town got its name. The path of the train now serves as a part of the W&OD trials.

The Old Saw Mill- The Old Saw Mill no longer stands in downtown Herndon. The site where the mill used to stand is now the home of Green Lizard Cycling, a locally run coffee shop that also sells and rents out bikes.

Herndon Remembers Mosby’s Raid
On March 17th 2013, the town of Herndon celebrated the 150th anniversary of Mosby’s raid. A reenactment was preformed in Town Square in the same place that the raid originally took place. The reenactment featured the members of the Fourth Virginia Cavalry Black Horse Troop and some of the original landmarks of the raid that are still standing today. The town also kept the museum open for extended hours that day to teach the visitors more about Mosby’s infamous raid.